Determining Central Black Hole Masses in Distant Active Galaxies and Quasars. II. Improved Optical and UV Scaling Relationships
University of Arizona · The Ohio State University
Abstract
We present four improved empirical relationships useful for estimating the central black hole mass in nearby AGNs and distant luminous quasars alike using either optical or UV single-epoch spectroscopy. These mass-scaling relationships between line widths and luminosity are based on recently improved empirical relationships between the broad-line region size and luminosities in various energy bands and are calibrated to the improved mass measurements of nearby AGNs based on emission-line reverberation mapping. The mass-scaling relationship based on the Hbeta line luminosity allows mass estimates for low-redshift sources with strong contamination of the optical continuum luminosity by stellar or non-thermal…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 31.69
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
2- MVMarianne VestergaardCorresponding
University of Arizona
- BMBradley M. Peterson
The Ohio State University
Topics & keywords
- Quasar
- Reverberation mapping
- Active galactic nucleus
- Luminosity
- Black hole (networking)
- Mass-to-light ratio
- Line (geometry)
- Galaxy